There’s a new search engine out there: Vivisimo. It seems to have a bit more intelligence about figuring out what one is looking for, and has a nice feature whereby it displays a selection of possible sub-categories. It is somewhat slower than Google.
07 February 2018: updated URL to point to information about the defunct company
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Coral is a distribution network meant to help distribute the load of a commonly-accessed site. Anyone who reads Slashdot is familiar with the effect of a slashdotting, when tens or hundreds of thousands of users hit a website all at once, pounding its servers and destroying its internet connexion. Well, Coral fixes that: instead of linking to http://foo.net/, link to http://foo.net.nyud.net:8090/.
So if anyone likes this blog enough to forward one of my pieces to Slashdot or elsewhere, do be kind enough to use the link provided☺
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Coral is a distribution network meant to help distribute the load of a commonly-accessed site. Anyone who reads Slashdot is familiar with the effect of a slashdotting, when tens or hundreds of thousands of users hit a website all at once, pounding its servers and destroying its internet connexion. Well, Coral fixes that: instead of linking to http://foo.net/, link to http://foo.net.nyud.net:8090/.
So if anyone likes this blog enough to forward one of my pieces to Slashdot or elsewhere, do be kind enough to use the link provided☺
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We’ve a few Exchange admins at work this week for a special project (for those of you outside the technorati, Microsoft Exchange is a mail server). One of them dropped by my cube because he was interested in the software I use to relay mail (it, too, is a mail server — I’ve just configured it to pass on mail rather than holding onto it). So I gave him a quick overview of the commands I use to see how many messages are sitting in the queue, to count the number of probably spams, and to track the progress of a message through the system, from arrival, through processing and to departure to its final destination.
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We’ve a few Exchange admins at work this week for a special project (for those of you outside the technorati, Microsoft Exchange is a mail server). One of them dropped by my cube because he was interested in the software I use to relay mail (it, too, is a mail server — I’ve just configured it to pass on mail rather than holding onto it). So I gave him a quick overview of the commands I use to see how many messages are sitting in the queue, to count the number of probably spams, and to track the progress of a message through the system, from arrival, through processing and to departure to its final destination.
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TeX by Topic is now available as a PDF on the web, directly from the author. Very cool.
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TeX by Topic is now available as a PDF on the web, directly from the author. Very cool.
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Most folks don’s know this nowadays, but one of the first production uses of Unix was as a writer’s tool. The typesetter used back then was called troff — a rather arcane and often odd little language which did its job nonetheless. roff is still used as the format for the ‘man’ (short for ‘manual’) pages which remain the bedrock of Unix documentation.
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Most folks don’s know this nowadays, but one of the first production uses of Unix was as a writer’s tool. The typesetter used back then was called troff — a rather arcane and often odd little language which did its job nonetheless. roff is still used as the format for the ‘man’ (short for ‘manual’) pages which remain the bedrock of Unix documentation.
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Last night I discovered Peter Flynn’s excellent Formatting information, A beginner’s introduction to typesetting with LaTeX. It looks like a valuable introduction to the only way to format text.
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Last night I discovered Peter Flynn’s excellent Formatting information, A beginner’s introduction to typesetting with LaTeX. It looks like a valuable introduction to the only way to format text.
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Neal Stephenson’s masterpiece, In the Beginning was the Command Line, is available online these days.
31 January 2018: updated URL
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